Service area local seo
-
Hello, everyone.
I am struggling a little with the vast amounts of information about how best to get a local service area business ranking and the best practice.
If I explain what I have been doing and then see how I can improve.
I have created a couple of websites for window cleaners. These window cleaners offer several services like window cleaning, gutter cleaning, conservatory cleaning, pressure washing etc.
They also cover several towns/cities so it's important for them to be able to target all these areas in search. They don't have multiple offices so only have one home/office address and by the nature of the job provide services at the customer's house/business.
What I have been doing is creating a page for each service they provide then to cover the areas I have been doing two things. Creating a page on the site called areas covered with a list of the areas they cover and also adding in the title of the page the main one or two areas that are most important to them.
From what I can gather this might not be the best approach?? Google may see the areas in titles as keyword stuffing? Google also doesn't like a list of areas in one go anywhere on a site which can also seem like keyword stuffing?
So for an example, this would be a rough title structure of service pages
Window cleaners in town/city, town/city and town/city
Gutter Cleaners in town/city, town/city and town/city
As I said I am not sure this is the best way to do this from what I read. I have read about area specific pages but i struggle to see how i could make each area specific page unique enough as the service is exactly the same in each area. I have also read that putting the most important keywords at the begingin of the the title is better so using the above example would this be better? town/city window cleaners - business name
So from what i understand having pages like this might be better
Window cleaners town/city1
Window cleaners town/city2
Window cleaners town/city3
Gutter Cleaners town/city1
Gutter Cleaners town/city2
Gutter Cleaners town/city3 and so on but like I say I am aware each of these area specific pages would need to be unique but being that the services are exactly the same in each area I am not sure how I could warrant creating all the pages. Writing about the specific area on the page seems a little odd in that the visitor who lands on that page doesn't want to learn about their area, they live there and know the area. They want to know what the service is and if they do in fact cover their area. In which case how can i best ensure all or most of the areas they cover are targeted and show in search? Some sites i have done cover around 20-30 towns around them so how can best ensure they rank for them?
I have also been reading conflicting information about how to structure pages and urls.
Some say don't use commas in page titles, some say don't use underscores and only use hyphens.
Similarly, I have read that the URL should not contain any hyphens but I am not sure about this seeing as WordPress often adds hyphens between words in URLs.
Some say you should always have an H1 on every page others say it's not all that important anymore.
With images, i have also been giving them alts the same as the page titles thay are on, is this the wrong thing to do?
Id be happy to private messge (if i can do that here) one of the sites
I would be eternally grateful if anyone can help in firstly clarifying how I could best improve ranking for areas covered and secondly what best practice is to structure page content like H1's image alts etc.
Thanks
-
Oh no no it would only be two or three max. I always say to people i do sites for that i will list all areas on areas cover page (now will be on each service page instead) and two or three main areas in titles.
-
Then, against best practices, it might be worth following suit listing just a couple of the main areas covered in the title for the sake of competition.
It's not as bad as I thought it would be. I was picturing more like "Window Cleaning in Town A, Town B, Town C, Town D, Town E".
-
It seems all towns in my area at least are listed as cities. I guess the issue is that several sites i have created all have competitors who are adding two or three areas to their titles. Using my area as an example again i just did a quick search and it seems services here are doing the same (see attached screenshot) So if i were to follow best practice and only include one area in a title then i would always loose out to listings like this. Especially if one of the potential customers was from one of the other areas.
-
Ah, I see your problem. If you look in Google Adwords planner for locations, you'll find a lot of the time that the bigger towns/cities in a county will be seen as the town/city. And surrounding towns will often be seen as neighbourhoods of that town or city. This isn't necessarily accurate in real life, but for Google's sake it works. You can see how Google identifies different locations using Google Adwords tools, even if you're not advertising.
It would be worth checking this, because then you can target the main town/city in the area specifically in the page title, and still be "covered" for the surrounding areas in terms of relevance. Though I would still mention the surrounding towns covered within the content of the landing page.
-
Ria you have been very helpful but the area thing has raised more questions for me.
If i take my area for example. I live in Cornwall UK which is a fairly big county and if I were a window cleaner would probably cover 4-5 towns near me.
In the titles having the area as Cornwall would lead to a lot of frustration of visitors as I only cover a small bit of Cornwall. Equally, if I used the town I live in in the titles it would limit my traffic possibly if say someone is in a neighbouring town looking for a cleaner.
I guess my only option would be to use my own town in this example or put a couple of towns in the title at the risk google will see it as spammy. Any other suggestions from anyone are more than welcome.
-
Great thank you. Yes, I thought maybe columns for the bullets would be better.
-
I think listing items in bullet points will be less spammy as they are marked up as list items. You can format them how you like, however, such as in multiple columns - so that they're not so ugly looking on the page, and won't look so... vertical? e.g. 3 columns of 10 rows, 5 columns of 6, etc.
And I would focus the page titles on wider areas site-wide, if it were me.
-
Thank you!
Sorry yes it was quite a lot!
So if i understand you correctly on each service page (window cleaning, gutter cleaning etc) i should have a section similar to this?
We provide our window cleaning service to these areas. If you don't see your area listed please get in touch as we may be looking to build upon our round in other areas.
- Area
- Area
- Area
- Area
- Area
- Area
- Area
Bullet-pointed lists could be quite long when we have 30 if not more towns though. I used to do this on each service page like this.
Window cleaners covering:
area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area, area.
But was told that would be seen spammy?
In regard to page titles thanks for clarifying that one thing i am still not sure of is how to target the page url. You say the main homepage should target the wider area so homepage title should be
business name - window cleaners wider area or wider area window cleaners - business name.
On service pages should I also have this structure focusing on the wider area as I guess adding two or three areas in the page title may also seem spammy?
-
Wow, that's a lot to answer.
I assume that those towns form part of a bigger area, like a county? I would personally target the landing page to the whole area. Then, as you mentioned, have an "areas covered" section on each landing page with a Google map and bullet list of towns. Use the landing page to target the towns you cover, without it sounding spammy. Just read it aloud afterwards and ask yourself, "does that sound natural?".
You're right that you shouldn't have separate town pages if you can't think of anything unique to say on each one that would be of value to your customer.
Also:
- There is nothing wrong with commas in your page titles. Or hyphens. I don't know why you'd want an underscore in there, but they're fine too.
- There is nothing wrong with hyphens in your URLs. In your domain, however, if you are keyword stuffing your domain using a hyphen as a word separator, then that can look a little spammy. In your URL though, it's fine to separate words and is preferred over the underscore.
- It's still a good idea to ensure each page has ONE H1 (this is often quite similar/relevant to the page title). Then structure your H2s and H3s beneath in way that makes logical sense to your content.
- Alt text for images should provide a short description of what the image actually depicts. If the image depicts window cleaning, then you can tag it just as "Window Cleaning".
And, if you haven't already, you'll want to make a Google My Business account and verify it.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
How accurate are google keyword estimates for local search volume?
We've all used the Google Adwords Keywords Tool, and if you're like me you use it to analyze data for a particular region. Does anyone know how accurate this data is? For example, I'd like to know how often people in Savannah, Georgia search for the word "forklift". I figure that Google can give me two kinds of data when I ask for how many people in Savannah search for "forklift". They might actually give me rough data for how many people in the region actually searched for the term "forklift" over the last 12 months, then divide by 12 to give me a monthly average. Or they might use data on a much broader region and then adjust for Savannah's population size. In other words, they might say, in the US people searched for "forklift" and average of 1,000,000 times a month. The US has a population of 300,000,000. Savannah has a population of about 250,000. 250,000 / 300,000,000 is 0.00083. 1,000,000 times 0.00083 is 208. So, "forklift" is searched in Savannah an average of 208 times. 1. is obviously much more accurate. I suspect that 2. is the model that Google is actually using. Does anyone know with reasonable certainty which it is? Thanks,
Local Website Optimization | | aj613
Adam0 -
More pages on website better for SEO?
Hi all, Is creating more pages better for SEO? Of course the pages being valuable content. Is this because you want the user to spend as much time as possible on your site. A lot of my competitors websites seem to have more pages than mine and their domain authorities are higher, for example the services we provide are all on one page and for my competitors each services as its own page. Kind Regards, Aqib
Local Website Optimization | | SMCCoachHire0 -
Multi location silo seo technique
A physical therapy company has 8 locations in one city and 4 locations in another with plans to expand. I've seen two methods to approach this. The first I feel is sloppy and that is the individual url for each location that points to from the location pages on the main domain. The second is to use the silo technique incorporated with metro scale addition. You have the main domain with the number of silos (individual stores) and each silo has its own content (what they do at each store is pretty much the same). My question is should the focus of each silo, besides making sure there is no duplicate copy, to increase their own hyperlocal outreach? Focus on social, reviews, content curated for the specific location. How would you attack this problem?
Local Website Optimization | | Ohmichael1 -
Community Discussion - What are your experiences creating local landing pages?
Hi there, Moz Community! In Tuesday's post on the Moz Blog, "Overcoming Your Fear of Local Landing Pages," Miriam Ellis asks: When tasked with developing a set of city landing pages for your local business clients, do you experience any of the following: brain fog, dry mouth, sweaty palms, procrastination, woolgathering, or ennui? Then chances are, the diagnosis is a _fear of local landing pages. _ Which brings me to today's question! What are the toughest challenges you've faced when creating local landing pages? How have you overcome them? What successes have you had, and what lessons have you learned along the way?
Local Website Optimization | | MattRoney4 -
Pages ranking outside of sales area
Hi there Moz Community, I work with a client (a car dealership), that mostly serves an area within 50-100 miles at most from their location. A previous SEO company had built a bunch of comparison pages on their website (i.e. 2016 Acura ILX vs. Mercedes-Benz C300). These pages perform well in their backyard in terms of engagement metrics like bounce rate, session duration, etc. However, they pull in traffic from all over the country and other countries as well. Because they really don't have much of an opportunity to sell someone a car across the country that a customer could easily buy at their local dealership, anyone from outside their primary marketing area typically bounces. So, it drags down their overall site metrics plus all of the metrics for these pages. I imagine searchers from outside their primary sales area are seeing their location and saying "whoah that's far and not what I'm looking for." I tried localizing the pages by putting their city name in the title tags, meta descriptions, and content, but that doesn't seem to really be getting rid of this traffic from areas too far away to sell a car to. My worry is that the high bounce rates, low time on site, and general irrelevancy of these pages to someone far away are going to affect them negatively. So, short of trying to localize the content on the page or just deleting these pages all together, I'm not quite sure where to go from here. Do you think that having these high bouncing pages will hurt them? Any suggestions would be welcomed. Thanks!
Local Website Optimization | | Make_Model1 -
Server response time: restructure the site or create the new one? SEO opinions needed.
Hi everyone, The internal structure of our existing site increase server response time (6 sec) which is way below Google 0.2sec standards and also make prospects leave the site before it's loaded. Now we have two options (same price): restructure the site's modules, panels etc create new site (recommended by developers)
Local Website Optimization | | Ryan_V
Both options will extend the same design and functionality. I just wanted to know which option SEO community will recommend?0 -
General SEO Help
Hi Everyone, **Website: **www.helppestcontrol.com I've been working on a wordpress based website for the past few months now. This is a new website that we designed for an existing company that decided to rebrand. The previous website had little to no traffic.. so we've basically started for scratch. I've followed SEO guides and have completed many of the basics. We started using MOZ just under a month ago and have made a ton of changes based upon those suggestions. With all of this being said, we have seen some slight improvements in traffic, but nothing truly noticeable. In fact, 90% of our traffic is coming from a Facebook PPC campaign. I think the main struggle is that the company has such a wide operating based (a ton of very small towns and cities). We created an optimize page for each one (same content, just switched out the keywords).. in hopes of driving traffic. Is this the correct approach? Or should be optimize for general terms such as "Bed Bug Removal" versus "Bed Bug Removal Barrie"? I was hoping that the community could take a look at the website (maybe run it through a few tests) and give me some more suggestions. I would really appreciate any feedback. Thank you!
Local Website Optimization | | Timrhendry0 -
Short EMD or Longer Partial MD: Which is better for SEO
Hey Guys, I appreciate all of the amazing responses you have been posting over the last two days.
Local Website Optimization | | Web3Marketing87
I have been a little tied up with Joomla 1.5 transfers, but I will make some comments soon! In the meantime, here is an interesting one: I have an existing domain with a little bit of DA - www.edmontonweb.ca as well as a parked domain with no DA - launchwebdesign.ca I have been advised to redirect (301) to the launch domain, but I still wonder if the current domain is better - after all it is very short & was registered over 5 years ago. Since launching the new site it has been about a month. We are currently #1 for almost every term on Bing & Yahoo (web design, edmonton web design etc.) but 14th on Google for "edmonton web design." Do you think switching the domain is a good call, or keep trying with edmontonweb.ca for a bit longer? Thanks guys, Anton0